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ERM Theory and Practice Stephen P. D’Arcy University of Illinois Concurrent Session ERM 2 CAS Spring Meeting May 2006

ERM Theory and Practice

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ERM Theory and Practice. Stephen P. D’Arcy University of Illinois Concurrent Session ERM 2 CAS Spring Meeting May 2006. ERM Theory. ERM Practice. Current Situation. ERM Theory. ERM considers all risks an organization can or does face holistically - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: ERM Theory and Practice

ERM Theory and Practice

Stephen P. D’Arcy

University of Illinois

Concurrent Session ERM 2CAS Spring Meeting

May 2006

Page 2: ERM Theory and Practice

Current SituationERM Theory ERM Practice

Page 3: ERM Theory and Practice

ERM Theory

• ERM considers all risks an organization can or does face holistically

• Organizations have a well defined risk appetite• All participants have a common language for, and

understanding of, risk• Risk is fully quantified• Risk management is applied consistently within

the organization• ERM adds value to the organization

Page 4: ERM Theory and Practice

ERM Theory – Risk Aggregation

Aggregate Risk Management

Hazard Risk

- Hurricanes

- Lawsuits

- Injuries

Financial Risk

- Credit Risk

- Market Risk

- Interest Rates

Operational Risk

- Internal Fraud

- Recalls

Strategic Risk

- Regulation

- Reputation

- Competition

Page 5: ERM Theory and Practice

ERM Theory – Risk Appetite

• Limits for adverse event– Severity– Frequency

• Same values used for all risks• Examples

– 99.97% chance of remaining solvent– 95% chance of retaining AA rating or higher– 0.1% chance of losses exceeding $1 billion– Need 25% return (or $250 million) to increase 0.1% loss

probability from $1 billion to $1.1 billion

Page 6: ERM Theory and Practice

ERM Theory – Common Language

Page 7: ERM Theory and Practice

ERM Theory – Quantification

• Firm has a set aggregate risk tolerance

• Entire distribution of outcomes is known

• Correlations between risk factors specified– Constant– Tail

• Need for a CAPM approach to risk– 250 risk factors → 31,125 correlations– Covariance with market risk → 250 correlations

Page 8: ERM Theory and Practice

Effect of Correlationf(x)

0

0.01

0.02

0.03

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0.05

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130 140

$ Outcome

Prob

abili

ty

f(y)

0

0.01

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0.03

0.04

0.05

0.06

1 11 21 31 41 51 61 71 81 91 101 111 121 131 141

$ Outcome

Prob

abili

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f(x+y), corr=0.5

0

0.01

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0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130 140

$ Outcome

Prob

abili

tyf(x+y), corr=1

0

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0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350

$ Outcome

Prob

abili

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Page 9: ERM Theory and Practice

ERM Theory – Consistent Application

• Concentration of homeowners policies accepted up to point the overall risk to firm reaches risk tolerance level

• Reinsurance retention selected based on risk tolerance level

• Investment portfolio asset allocation determined based on risk tolerance level

• Chance of IT system failure in line with risk tolerance level

Page 10: ERM Theory and Practice

ERM Theory – Value Added

• Policyholders pay risk premium on auto insurance

• Aggregate loss variation of auto insurer– Directly related to loss frequency

• Oil prices impact driving patterns– Inversely related to auto loss frequency

• Auto insurer can reduce aggregate risk by assuming oil price risk

• Insurer will be paid to accept oil price risk• Combining risk adds value to insurer

Page 11: ERM Theory and Practice

ERM Practice• ERM coordinates hazard and financial risk

• Organizations can verbalize risk appetite (remote chance of insolvency) but not quantify it

• Participants have different languages for risk, but might understand some of the other participants’ terminology

• Only hazard and financial risk is quantified

• ERM is used primarily to monitor risk exposure

Page 12: ERM Theory and Practice

ERM Practice – Coordination

• Asset-Liability Management (ALM)– Duration matching

• Combining hazard and financial risk– WC and foreign exchange risk– Longevity risk and interest rate risk

Page 13: ERM Theory and Practice

ERM Practice – Risk Appetite

• Common level of risk of insolvency: 0.03%– Based on old study of AA bond defaults– One year happened to be this level– Does not reflect chance of downgrade, then

defaulting

Page 14: ERM Theory and Practice

ERM Practice –Risk Languages

“amministrazione di rischio ”

“リスク管理”

“위험 관리”

“διαχείριση

Κινδύνου”

“управления при допущении риска”

“gerencia de riesgo ”

“风险管理”

“Risikomanagement”

“ gestion des risques”

“risk management”

Page 15: ERM Theory and Practice

ERM Practice –Risk Languages

• Hazard risk language has developed over last four centuries– Frequency, severity, retentions– Probable Maximum Loss (PML)– Maximum Possible Loss (MPL)

• Financial risk language developed over last four decades– Duration and convexity– Derivatives – forwards, futures, options, swaps– Value-at-Risk (VaR), Tail VaR

• New ERM language being created now

Page 16: ERM Theory and Practice

ERM Practice –Quantification

• Hazard risk can be quantified well– Loss distributions – empirical and theoretical– Cat risk modeling

• Financial risk is also quantified– VaR – historical or analytical– Term structure models– Option pricing models– Delta hedging– Volatility smiles

• Operational risk measurement minimal– “Still in its infancy” or “Pre-infancy stage”

Page 17: ERM Theory and Practice

ERM Practice – Risk Monitoring

• Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

• COSO – checklist of risks

• Basil II – risk treatment

• Rating agencies– Organizational structure– Use of models

Page 18: ERM Theory and Practice

What’s Needed for ERM to Grow

• Quantify Operational Risk

• Integrate Risk Effectively

• Develop Reliable Risk Metrics

• Communicate Risk to Decision Makers

• Weed out Ineffective Risk Managers – Positive impact of disasters– Survival of the fittest